Newlyn Society ‘Memory’ Tremenheere Gallery near Penzance , April 9-1st May, (closed Mondays) 11-4 free admission.
I gather from reading a notice that the title is not meaning that all the artists selected tackle that subject head-on- they can send in any current work, but at first I was looking for connections with memory and I think the show could better be entitled less misleadingly ‘ current work by NSA artists.’
As I was enjoying looking around a member asked me if I was going to dismiss the entire show as she thought I did last time I wrote about NSA but if you reread my previous blog on ‘maryfletcher’s blog on art’ I did not do that. I think artists can stand a few less than ecstatic responses however. Recently someone crossed the street to thank me for a review that wasn’t entirely positive because they found it thought provoking.
Some of the artists have responded to the title for example Sue Bleakley made a brain-like sculpture,
Delpha Hudson looked back at different caring roles she had experience of,
Andrew Swan chronicled various remarks from Boris Johnson with implied disapproval.
There are a lot of pictures and some video and 3D work so it takes a while to digest the variety and pick anything out.
I liked Carlos Zapata’s ‘St Joseph and the golden Child’ which is painted wood.
Leone Whitton ‘Signals from Lyonesse’ is darkly mysterious.
Daniel Turner’s ‘Pikes’ is a fanciful attractive landscape.
Melissa Wraxall’s ‘Charybdis’ is a vibrant expressionist composition.
Charlotte Turner’s ‘Quiet Introspection’ is a very subtle circular abstraction.
So as usual a huge variety and catering to most tastes.
Sometimes a bit of information or explanation on a label might help the viewer who drops in but one can go to the NSA website for research or ask an invigilator.
If the videos are not working you can ask to have them turned on.
ReplyDelete